4.8 Article

In Situ Observation on Dislocation-Controlled Sublimation of Mg Nanoparticles

Journal

NANO LETTERS
Volume 16, Issue 2, Pages 1156-1160

Publisher

AMER CHEMICAL SOC
DOI: 10.1021/acs.nanolett.5b04439

Keywords

Dislocation density; sublimation rate; liquid-like motion; monatomic ledge; Mg nanoparticles

Funding

  1. Chinese 1000-Youth-Talent Plan
  2. 973 Program of China [2015CB65930]
  3. [11234011]
  4. [11327901]

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Sublimation is an important endothermic phase transition in which the atoms break away from their neighbors in the crystal lattice and are removed into the gas phase. Such debonding process may be significantly influenced by dislocations, the crystal defect that changes the bonding environment of local atoms. By performing systematic defects characterization and in situ transmission electron microscopy (TEM) tests on a core-shell MgO-Mg system, which enables us to modulate the internal dislocation density, we investigated the role of dislocations on materials' sublimation with particular focus on the sublimation kinetics and mechanism. It was observed that the sublimation rate increases significantly with dislocation density. As the density of screw dislocations is high, the intersection of screw dislocation spirals creates a large number of monatomic ledges, resulting in a liquid-like motion of solid gas interface, which significantly deviates from the theoretically predicted sublimation plane. Our calculation based on density functional theory demonstrated that the remarkable change of sublimation rate with dislocation density is due to the dramatic reduction in binding energy of the monatomic ledges. This study provides direct observation to improve our understanding on this fundamental phase transition as well as to shed light on tuning materials' sublimation by engineering dislocation density in applications.

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